Bill Text: GA SB88 | 2009-2010 | Regular Session | Introduced
Bill Title: State Symbol; Ralph Mark Gilbert Civil Rights Museum; official state civil rights museum
Spectrum: Partisan Bill (Democrat 1-0)
Status: (Introduced - Dead) 2009-02-03 - Senate Read and Referred [SB88 Detail]
Download: Georgia-2009-SB88-Introduced.html
09 LC
21 0227
Senate
Bill 88
By:
Senator Jackson of the 2nd
A
BILL TO BE ENTITLED
AN ACT
AN ACT
To
amend Article 3 of Chapter 3 of Title 50, relating to other state symbols, so as
to provide that the Ralph Mark Gilbert Civil Rights Museum shall be the official
state civil rights museum; to repeal conflicting laws; and for other
purposes.
SECTION
1.
WHEREAS,
Savannah has a long and storied role in the Civil Rights Movement, beginning
with a meeting between General Sherman and Secretary of War Stanton and 20 black
leaders on January 12, 1865, to discuss the matter of emancipation;
and
WHEREAS,
the Ralph Mark Gilbert Civil Rights Museum, recently named "Georgia's Best New
History Museum," is named in honor of the late Dr. Ralph Mark Gilbert, the
father of Savannah's modern day Civil Rights Movement and fearless National
Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP) leader known for much
more than his outspoken campaigns for civil rights; he was a nationally known
orator, pulpiteer, and playwright, producing religious dramas, known as passion
plays, throughout the country; and
WHEREAS,
Dr. Gilbert served as pastor of historic First African Baptist Church on
Franklin Square in Savannah for 16 years and reorganized the Savannah Branch of
the NAACP and served as president for eight years, convening the first state
conference attended by branches from Savannah, Brunswick, Dublin, Atlanta,
Columbus, Macon, Albany, and three other branches whose identities are
uncertain. Under his courageous leadership, more than 40 NAACP branches were
organized in Georgia by 1950; and
WHEREAS,
Georgia's best new history museum chronicles the civil rights struggle of
Georgia's oldest African American community from slavery to the present in three
floors of handsome photographic and interactive exhibits, including an NAACP
Organization exhibit, a fiber optic map of 87 significant civil rights
sites/events, a lunch counter where "sit-ins" occurred, segregation exhibits,
and video presentation, all part of the continuous education of the public on
the history of the civil rights struggle in Savannah and Georgia. The museum is
located in historic Savannah in a five-level building that was erected in 1914
as the Wage Earners Savings and Loan Bank for black Savannahians, the largest
black bank in the country at that time.
BE
IT ENACTED BY THE GENERAL ASSEMBLY OF GEORGIA:
SECTION
2.
Article
3 of Chapter 3 of Title 50, relating to other state symbols, is amended by
adding a new Code section to read as follows:
"50-3-85.
The
Ralph Mark Gilbert Civil Rights Museum is designated the official Georgia civil
rights museum."
SECTION
3.
All
laws and parts of laws in conflict with this Act are repealed.